2013
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-013-1114-1
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Closing the circle: is it feasible to rehabilitate reefs with sexually propagated corals?

Abstract: Sexual propagation of corals specifically for reef rehabilitation remains largely experimental. In this study, we refined low technology culture and transplantation approaches and assessed the role of colony size and age, at time of transfer from nursery to reef, on subsequent survival. Larvae from Acropora millepora were reared from gametes and settled on engineered substrates, called coral plug-ins, that were designed to simplify transplantation to areas of degraded reef. Plug-ins, with laboratory spawned an… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
163
0

Year Published

2015
2015
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
7
2

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 126 publications
(165 citation statements)
references
References 37 publications
2
163
0
Order By: Relevance
“…For oyster reefs, if survival of restored organisms was not reported, it was estimated based on percent cover of oysters on the reef (Konisky et al 2013) or the percentage of successful reefs out of the number of total reefs restored (Powers et al 2009). For the coral reefs records, where only cost per coral colony was provided (Shafir et al 2006, Garrison and Ward 2008, Shaish et al 2008, Ferse 2010, Levy et al 2010, Nakamura et al 2011, Guest et al 2014, calculations for the restoration cost per area were based on a transplanting schedule with four coral colonies out-planted per m 2 or 40 000 coral transplants/ha (Edwards and Gomez 2007). Accounting for a median survival of 64.5% (averaged over the reported pre-transplant, transplant, and post-transplant survival in the coral reef restoration database section), a total of 54 200 coral transplants would be required to populate one hectare.…”
Section: Systematic Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For oyster reefs, if survival of restored organisms was not reported, it was estimated based on percent cover of oysters on the reef (Konisky et al 2013) or the percentage of successful reefs out of the number of total reefs restored (Powers et al 2009). For the coral reefs records, where only cost per coral colony was provided (Shafir et al 2006, Garrison and Ward 2008, Shaish et al 2008, Ferse 2010, Levy et al 2010, Nakamura et al 2011, Guest et al 2014, calculations for the restoration cost per area were based on a transplanting schedule with four coral colonies out-planted per m 2 or 40 000 coral transplants/ha (Edwards and Gomez 2007). Accounting for a median survival of 64.5% (averaged over the reported pre-transplant, transplant, and post-transplant survival in the coral reef restoration database section), a total of 54 200 coral transplants would be required to populate one hectare.…”
Section: Systematic Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The primary purpose of coral nurseries is to grow coral colonies to a size that reduces mortality after transplantation onto damaged or degraded reefs. Coral transplants have a greater chance of survival the larger they are (60). The nurseries offer the advantage of decreased competition for resources (space, light), decreased predation, and suspension above sea-floor sediments.…”
Section: State Of Coral Reef Restoration Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If hybrids are comparatively resilient, interspecific hybridization may be combined with methods being developed for deploying coral larvae or recruits onto reefs requiring restoration (e.g., Nakamura et al, 2011;Omori, 2011;Villanueva et al, 2012;Guest et al, 2014;dela Cruz and Harrison, 2017). Overall, maternal effects were observed in hybrids of the A. tenuis × A. loripes cross and overdominance in hybrids of the A. sarmentosa × A. florida cross, with some variations between traits and treatment conditions.…”
Section: Positive Effects Of Hybridization Were Observed In Some F1 Hmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reef restoration is still in its infancy and all of the few successful efforts so far occurred on a small spatial scale (e.g., Nakamura et al, 2011;Omori, 2011;Villanueva et al, 2012;Guest et al, 2014;dela Cruz and Harrison, 2017). Traditionally, locally sourced biological material is used for restoration based on the assumption that these populations are locally adapted and therefore most likely to survive (Breed et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%